new marble goby, water cow

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo

samnteeg

Feeder Fish
Jan 17, 2009
2
0
0
iowa
last week we got this wonderful fish i've seen them called by both names and i have no way of posting a pic. the store called him a marble. i'm reaching out to anyone who has had 1 of these fish for a period of time. wondering what foods worked best for them and how fast they grew?
mines only 4 or 5 inches long. have him in a brackish tank with 2 velvet gobies/ dragon fish both a couple yrs old and about 8 inches long, an archer fish, a spotted puffer, 4 mollies ( had several more but marble ate them).1\2 the tank is sand 1\2 rock. marble seems to like the rock where the dragons LOVE the sand.
any suggestions would be great.
sam
 
thank you for the reply, but the question was what foods ppl had best luck with and how fast they grew. not how much they ate and how big they got.
 
last week we got this wonderful fish i've seen them called by both names and i have no way of posting a pic. the store called him a marble. i'm reaching out to anyone who has had 1 of these fish for a period of time. wondering what foods worked best for them and how fast they grew?
mines only 4 or 5 inches long. have him in a brackish tank with 2 velvet gobies/ dragon fish both a couple yrs old and about 8 inches long, an archer fish, a spotted puffer, 4 mollies ( had several more but marble ate them).1\2 the tank is sand 1\2 rock. marble seems to like the rock where the dragons LOVE the sand.
any suggestions would be great.
sam
Pretty sure marble gobys and water cows are two VERY closely related species, both get around 2-2 1/2 feet and around 5 lbs, if housed with other fish there definitely has to be adequate room if they're sub or adults, sometimes up to 300 gallons depending on their specific temperaments. You can feed them live or frozen foods, but it's possible they'd reject pellets, and never eat flakes. These fish are not full when they're ballooned, they're full when they look thick, if they're ballooned in the stomach you're definitely overfeeding. They do best in brackish water, it's where they're actually found, but do completely fine in full fresh as well. Be wary as they can become VERY VERY aggressive as they grow, and even as babies they'd appreciate good sized feedings every other day. The favorites are usually something like tilapia or smelt, and some shrimp or krill in the mix, but you should definitely experiment on what yours like.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Nilsafeller
A friend caught this Eleotris for me back in July, at about 8" , it's in a 180 gal tank.
67AB2C99-00DE-4C8C-A9C1-3F6F7E26A7E8_1_201_a.jpeg
The other day it happened to sit in front of the ruler. I feed it maybe every other day, fish meat, or the local shrimp.
CA4BE48E-4AE3-4AAE-9A67-EF4879D74100_1_201_a.jpeg
It is housed with about a dozen 3" to 5" Andinoacara cichlids, I expect to start losing the smallest cichlids soon, unless i can fish another suitable sized tank.
67AB2C99-00DE-4C8C-A9C1-3F6F7E26A7E8_1_201_a.jpegCA4BE48E-4AE3-4AAE-9A67-EF4879D74100_1_201_a.jpeg
Above a recent shot when it perched near a ruler, has gained some extra girth too.
3BFA9FDA-81A9-47BA-BBEA-931A39DADF64_1_201_a.jpeg
13CA573D-231E-41DC-B595-D4D1985E61EB_1_201_a.jpeg
It changes color and color patterns frequently with mood, or hunting style (position), or sunlight.
2C369277-05F5-4E17-8068-272A9105F975_1_201_a.jpeg
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com